About Me

I’m Paige

Systems Engineer

A few years ago, my life looked fine on paper — 

but it felt like I was always one busy week away from falling behind. I was in my early thirties, newly divorced, and managing a house on my own while working full‑time as a Process Engineer. I kept things running, but it was quite literally the only thing I did. The house became a second job, I rarely had energy to do anything fun, and during the heavy overtime seasons at work, it was always the first thing to drop. Laundry piled up, dishes waited, bills got pushed to “later,” and I felt like my only two options were rest and responsibility.

I was overloaded. And I needed a way to make “adulting” easier.

Because I build processes for a living, the next question came naturally: “How do I fix this?”

I looked for the friction points. I simplified and batched as much as possible. I automated anything that didn’t need a human. And slowly, things got easier. The house stopped demanding so much. My weeks felt less chaotic and rigid. I had time again — real time, not leftover scraps.

Along the way, I realized something most people never stop long enough to consider: We don’t need to work harder — we just need to let the tools around us do more of the work. 

A lot of households fall into patterns where one person “just handles” certain tasks — even if they don’t like them, even if they’re burned out, especially if they’re the only one who knows how. But delegation doesn’t have to be to a spouse or another person. Sometimes the most reliable, least emotional, most relationship‑saving option is to give up some control and automate. A neutral system that consistently gets things done without anyone having to carry it.

That’s the heart of what I teach here.

The Routine Shift is built on a simple idea:

Life gets easier one small shift at a time.

One routine made quicker. One task automated. One decision removed, or one decision reduced to the easiest possible choice. Enough of those tiny shifts, and your week becomes calmer without you even noticing when the turning point happened.

My work focuses on three areas where these shifts make the biggest difference:

Home Systems

Make the house easier to run by taking the repetitive, easy‑to‑forget tasks off your plate. This includes finding ways to remove, simplify, or automate chores and home maintenance so they stop piling up during busy weeks. These behind‑the‑scenes shifts keep your home functioning even when your energy is low.

Personal Systems

Learn new ways to handle the life admin that usually clutters your brain — the appointments, reminders, planning, and paperwork. Instead of relying on memory, motivation, or “what fire to put out first,” these systems create predictability so things get handled before they become last‑minute stress or crisis.

Habit Systems

Actually keep the changes you’re trying to build by learning how to identify where you personally get stuck. Habit Systems teach you how to weave new routines into your day without relying on willpower or strict schedules. This is the “how” that turns your Home and Personal Systems into sustainable, long‑term routines.

Everything I create is designed to give you that “aha” moment — the one where you finally see a path to a less stressful life, and it feels doable instead of overwhelming.

If you’re ready for a week that feels lighter, steadier, and more manageable, you’re in the right place. Start with one small shift. The rest builds from there.